Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Denial serves no one

Religious leaders must speak out

- CLINT SCHNEKLOTH The Rev. Clint Schnekloth is lead pastor at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Fayettevil­le. He. blogs at lutheran confession­s.blogspot.com.

Contempora­ry denial of climate change is not unlike the Galileo affair around 1610. The church and many religious leaders of that era resisted evidence of a heliocentr­ic universe presented by Galileo, so much so that Galileo famously wrote, “My dear Kepler, I wish that we might laugh at the remarkable stupidity of the common herd. What do you have to say about the principal philosophe­rs of this academy who are filled with the stubbornne­ss of an asp and do not want to look at either the planets, the moon or the telescope, even though I have freely and deliberate­ly offered them the opportunit­y a thousand times? Truly, just as the asp stops its ears, so do these philosophe­rs shut their eyes to the light of truth.”

In 2018, the religiousl­y led denial of climate change is equally stubborn. However, in our day such denial has real world consequenc­es. In fact, scientists now conclude that we only have until about 2030 to make rapid and far-reaching changes in order to stem catastroph­ic climate change.

If we are going to make changes, it would seem wise to spend our energy advocating for the changes that will have the most significan­t impact. Where to focus? Well, producing meat has a larger environmen­tal impact than nearly any other human activity. Livestock and poultry production takes up about 80 percent of our global agricultur­al land, is responsibl­e for 15 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions (more than the entire transporta­tion industry), consumes 30 percent of global freshwater, is the main source of water pollution in the U.S. and has contribute­d significan­tly here locally to Buffalo River impairment.

The bulk of meat’s environmen­tal impact comes from the vast quantities of corn and soy used to feed livestock and poultry. And the truth is, we know simple practices that can dramatical­ly reduce pollution from these fields, including cover cropping and conservati­on tillage, optimizing fertilizer applicatio­n to prevent excess runoff, and a moratorium on further clearance of native ecosystems.

The question remains, who has the authority and ability to encourage or make such changes? Mostly, the answer is market forces. A very small handful of companies control 50-75 percent of the major meat markets in the United States, so the policies set by these few companies shape almost all agricultur­al practice in the United States. These companies will make such changes in their supply chains only or primarily if they understand them to be in their economic self-interest.

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